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Legal Descriptions

Principles 1 Chapter 8
Horizontales
A horizontal plane from which heights and depths are measured
One of 37 north and south survey lines established and defined as part of the rectangular survey (government survey) system.
A strip of land running east and west in the government (rectangular) survey system; not used in Texas
A section with mile long sides and an area of one square mile, or 640 acres
A system established in 1785 by the federal government providing for surveying as describing land by reference to principal meridians and base lines. Also called the government survey system. Not used in Texas
One of a set of imaginary lines running east and west and crossing a principal meridian at a definite point, used by surveyors for reference in locating and describing land under the rectangular survey (or government survey) system of property description.
A legal description of a parcel of land that begins at a well-marked point and follows the boundaries, using direction and distances around the tract back to the place of beginning
Verticales
A fixed natural or artificial object used to establish real estate boundaries for a metes and bounds description
A permanent reference mark or point established for use by surveyors in measuring differences in elevation
In a metes and bounds legal description, the starting point of a survey, situated in one corner of the parcel
A description of a specific parcel of real estate complete enough for an independent surveyor to locate and identify it.
Lines running at six-mile intervals parallel to the base lines in the rectangular survey (government survey) system; not used in Texas
The principal unit of the rectangular survey (government survey) system. A township square with 6 miles sides and an area of 36 square miles; not used in Texas
A strip of land six miles wide, extending north and south, and numbered east and west according to its distance from the principal meridian in the rectangular (government) survey system of land description
A tract of land divided by the owner, known as the developer, into blocks, building lots, and streets according to a recorded subdivision plat, which must comply with local ordinances and regulations